Structural Properties of an Open Problem in Preemptive Scheduling
Bo Chen, Ed Coffman, Dariusz Dereniowski, Wieslaw Kubiak

TL;DR
This paper refines bounds on structural parameters of optimal preemptive schedules for a specific scheduling problem, revealing exponential decay in minimal shifts and bounds on preemptions, advancing understanding of an open problem in scheduling theory.
Contribution
It provides sharp bounds on preemptions and shifts for a well-known open problem, using combinatorial analysis based on the structural property of normality.
Findings
Maximum preemptions needed is 2n-1
Minimum shift can be as small as 2^{-2n+1}
Preemptions occur at multiples of decreasing powers of 2
Abstract
Structural properties of optimal preemptive schedules have been studied in a number of recent papers with a primary focus on two structural parameters: the minimum number of preemptions necessary, and a tight lower bound on `shifts', i.e., the sizes of intervals bounded by the times created by preemptions, job starts, or completions. So far only rough bounds for these parameters have been derived for specific problems. This paper sharpens the bounds on these structural parameters for a well-known open problem in the theory of preemptive scheduling: Instances consist of in-trees of unit-execution-time jobs with release dates, and the objective is to minimize the total completion time on two processors. This is among the current, tantalizing `threshold' problems of scheduling theory: Our literature survey reveals that any significant generalization leads to an NP-hard problem, but…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScheduling and Optimization Algorithms · Optimization and Search Problems · Distributed and Parallel Computing Systems
